Male hormones (called androgens), particularly testosterone and dihydrotestosterone, determine male secondary sex characteristics and stimulate prostate cell growth. When prostate cells, both healthy and cancerous, are deprived of androgens, they no longer proliferate and eventually die.
Hormonal treatment in prostate cancer uses drugs or surgery (orchiectomy) to suppress or block male hormones (androgen), particularly testosterone and...
Read moreResearchers in Taiwan, using data from the Taiwan Longitudinal Health Insurance Database 2000, have conducted a study that they say... Read more »
For over 100 years, the symptoms that constitute ADHD have been continuously refined by the scientific community. Many researchers note... Read more »
For years, we have had terminology dividing diabetes into subgroups: there's "type 1" and "type 2" diabetes (type 1 is autoimmune diabetes... Read more »
Source: ADAM Encyclopedia
Hormone Therapy and ChemotherapyAndrogen Deprivation Therapy (Hormone Therapy)Male hormones (called androgens), particularly testosterone and... Read more »
Source: ADAM Encyclopedia
Tumor - Leydig cell; Testicular tumorSymptomsThere may be no symptoms.When symptoms do occur, they can include:Discomfort or pain in the... Read more »
Source: Harvard Decision Guide
Your doctor will ask when you first noticed the problem and whether your symptoms have worsened over time. He or she will examine the testicle and... Read more »
Source: Medifocus Guidebook on: Prostate Cancer
The first decision in the management of patients with prostate cancer is how aggressively the cancer is to be treated. Aggressive treatment usually... Read more »
Source: ADAM Encyclopedia
Cancer - testes; Germ cell tumor; Seminoma testicular cancer; Nonseminoma testicular cancerTreatmentTreatment depends on the:Type of testicular... Read more »